Back at St. Martin's Church,
ours was not a god of subtleties.
Our god, whose name was Gott im Himmel,
demanded memorization of long passages
of the Heidelberg Catechism.
He demanded a congregation
in woolen suits over woolen underwear,
an aroma of chores just accomplished
in barns full of Holsteins.
He demanded music from an organ
earnestly but poorly played
by the arthritic fingers of a very old woman.
Hymns no one knew.
Endless sermons from a very old man.
Our god did not care much for joyful noises.
And though he'd share tiny cubes of bread
and sips of wine,
he seemed to prefer potato pancakes,
pork sausages and apple sauce.
Real cream in his coffee.
In his heaven, we knew there was lager beer.
In Hell, there were thin people.
~ Ralph Murre
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Minority
I heard said of a poet
whose name
I should have known
but I am small
and slip my poems
under your door.
~ RM
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Wednesday, January 05, 2011
Time Lines
...
o holy of holies
I see you
o grandchild
of my grandchild
I see you clearly
child of my child
product of my
reproduction
life from my life
o grandfather
do you see me?
o grandmother
I am working
in your garden
~ Ralph Murre
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)